The corner of Church and Chapel Streets, showing three landmarks of the Green. The Franklin Elm, said to have been planted on the day of Benjamin Franklin's death in 1790, was removed in 1904.
Dixwell Avenue at the intersection of Broadway and Goffe Streets. A large Coca-Cola sign is visible on the left, and several cars are visible on the street.
Men digging the foundation of the Ives Building. Four horses are hitched to a wagon in the center of the photo. In the background, several houses are visible on Temple Street.
An elevated view of the New Haven Free Public Library and the New Haven County Courthouse. Cars are parked along both sides of Elm Street. A streetcar is visible in the center of the street.
The intersection of Temple and Grove Streets, looking toward Elm Street. The first house on the right is the Noah Webster House, built about 1823 and removed to Michigan around 1936 by Henry Ford.
A snow-covered New Haven Green, with the old State House (also used as a Courthouse) visible in the left center. The State House, designed by Ithiel Town and erected in 1831, was razed in 1889.